William Miller's Dream

[Referred to on Page 48]

I dreamed that God, by an unseen hand, sent me a curiously wrought
casket about ten inches long by six square, made of ebony and pearls curiously inlaid. To
the casket there was a key attached. I immediately took the key and opened the casket,
when, to my wonder and surprise, I found it filled with all sorts and sizes of jewels,
diamonds, precious stones, and gold and silver coin of every dimension and value,
beautifully arranged in their several places in the casket; and thus arranged they
reflected a light and glory equaled only to the sun.

I thought it was not my duty to enjoy this wonderful sight alone,
although my heart was overjoyed at the brilliancy, beauty, and value of its contents. I
therefore placed it on a center table in my room and gave out word that all who had a
desire might come and see the most glorious and brilliant sight ever seen by man in this
life.

The people began to come in, at first few in number, but increasing to
a crowd. When they first looked into the casket, they would wonder and shout for joy. But
when the spectators increased, everyone would begin to trouble the jewels, taking them out
of the casket and scattering them on the table.

I began to think that the owner would require the casket and the jewels
again at my hand; and if I suffered them to be scattered, I could never place them in
their places in the casket again as before; and felt I should never be able to meet the
accountability, for it would be immense. I then began to plead with the people not to
handle them, nor to take them out of the casket; but the more I pleaded, the more they
scattered; and now they seemed to scatter them all over the room, on the floor and on
every piece of furniture in the room.

I then saw that among the genuine jewels and coin they had scattered an
innumerable quantity of spurious jewels and counterfeit coin. I was highly incensed at
their base conduct and ingratitude, and reproved and reproached them for it; but the more
I reproved, the more they scattered the spurious jewels and false coin among the genuine.

I then became vexed in my physical soul and began to use physical force
to push them out of the room; but while I was pushing out one, three more would enter and
bring in dirt and shavings and sand and all manner of rubbish, until they covered every
one of the true jewels, diamonds, and coins, which were all excluded from sight. They also
tore in pieces my casket and scattered it among the rubbish. I thought no man regarded my
sorrow or my anger. I became wholly discouraged and disheartened, and sat down and wept.

While I was thus weeping and mourning for my great loss and
accountability, I remembered God, and earnestly prayed that He would send me help.

Immediately the door opened, and a man entered the room, when the
people all left it; and he, having a dirt brush in his hand, opened the windows, and began
to brush the dirt and rubbish from the room.

I cried to him to forbear, for there were some precious jewels
scattered among the rubbish.

He told me to "fear not," for he would "take care of
them".

Then, while he brushed the dirt and rubbish, false jewels and
counterfeit coin, all rose and went out of the window like a cloud, and the wind carried
them away. In the bustle I closed my eyes for a moment; when I opened them, the rubbish
was all gone. The precious jewels, the diamonds, the gold and silver coins, lay scattered
in profusion all over the room.

He then placed on the table a casket, much larger and more beautiful
than the former, and gathered up the jewels, the diamonds, the coins, by the handful, and
cast them into the casket, till not one was left, although some of the diamonds were not
bigger than the point of a pin.

He then called upon me to "come and see."

I looked into the casket, but my eyes were dazzled with the sight. They
shone with ten times their former glory. I thought they had been scoured in the sand by
the feet of those wicked persons who had scattered and trod them in the dust. They were
arranged in beautiful order in the casket, every one in its place, without any visible
pains of the man who cast them in. I shouted with very joy, and that shout awoke me.